Nominated for four Naledi Awards (South Africa's equivalent of the Olivier Awards) including Best New South African Play.
Craig Higginson Books
Craig Higginson is an internationally acclaimed writer whose works delve into the depths of the human psyche and the complexities of interpersonal relationships. His plays, often lauded for their daring perspective and literary depth, focus on themes of identity, memory, and the search for meaning in the contemporary world. Higginson's prose style is characterized by keen introspection and lyrical language that draws readers into a maelstrom of emotion. Through his works, he offers insightful commentary on societal challenges and universal human experiences, earning him a reputation as one of the most significant contemporary voices in literature.






Winner of Naledi Award for Best New South African play (March 2011).
The Dream House
- 258 pages
- 10 hours of reading
The narrative unfolds in a valley where a farmhouse is replicated multiple times, each version slightly different. Amidst this eerie setting, a woman in a wheelchair sifts through memories while her husband explores the remnants of past life. Themes of longing and mortality emerge through the dreams of a young woman labeled as 'the barren one' and the introspection of an aging headmaster. The arrival of a mysterious car at the driveway adds tension, hinting at unresolved stories and connections within this haunting landscape.
Little Foot
- 96 pages
- 4 hours of reading
Part realism, part nightmare, acclaimed South African playwright Craig Higginson's play takes us on an unforgettable journey into our unconscious ancestral memory.
The Landscape Painter
- 274 pages
- 10 hours of reading
It’s winter in London, 1947. When Arthur Bailey, a solitary landscape painter, catches sight of a young woman, Felicity, who is moving into the neighbouring bed-sit, he’s stirred to recall in haunting detail events that have been kept hidden for fifty years.The Landscape Painter is a double tale of obsession, betrayed trust and irrepressible hope. As a young and brilliant artist, Arthur travelled to South Africa in the late 1890s to pursue his best friend’s sister, the beautiful and enigmatic Carwyn Hamilton. His subsequent revelations about Carwyn were to blight his life and torment him for decades afterwards.From the gold-crazed streets of early Johannesburg and the epic battlefields of the Anglo-Boer War, to the austerity of post-War Britain, The Landscape Painter is a spectacular historical novel filled with wit and insight, written in Higginson’s characteristically sinuous, lyrical prose.